Allegations have been leveled at police in England and Wales for its “broken accountability” and $35 million lost over officer abuses. A UK inquiry into police standards, after a series of high-profile scandals, has triggered calls for ethical reform.

An investigation by the home affairs select committee revealed
inconsistencies in policing standards across England and Wales.
The probe came in response to a series of scandals involving
senior officers across England and Wales which cost the
government over $35 million according to the study. The scandals
involved reports of officers using the names of dead children in
undercover operations, corruption, abuse of power and
falsification of statistics.

"Broken systems of accountability and a patchwork of police
standards and training, have allowed a minority of officers to
get away with corruption and incompetence,” said Labour MP
Keith Vaz, chairman of the committee that carried out the study.
He added that a new code of ethics and integrity should be
brought in to stamp out corruption and abuse of authority.

He said there had been examples of “misconduct and criminality
within their ranks” and there was an “undercurrent of
discontent” throughout the service as austerity measures are
having an adverse effect on “the sense of worth of ordinary
officers."

The study demanded greater transparency and that the system of
accountability be reformed, preventing officers from retiring to
escape corruption allegations and misconduct hearings.

One of the main issues touched upon by the study was the huge
disparity in salaries in the force, with senior officers being
paid up to ten times more than their lower-ranking counterparts.

The starting salary for a police officer is $28,000 compared to
police and crime commissioners, who can earn up to $153,000.

The committee says there have been a number of cases in which
officers have dodged allegations of corruption and abuse of
authority by handing in their resignations. It cited the case of
Sir Norman Bettison, an ex-constable in West Yorkshire who
avoided charges of gross misconduct in connection with the 1989
Hillsborough disaster by resigning.

The Hillsborough incident is thought to be one of the worst
football accidents in history, in which 96 people died in a
massive crowd stampede during a football match between Liverpool
and Nottingham Forest football clubs on 15 April, 1989.

The investigation also uncovered evidence that some elements in
the police force had been manipulating statistics to make
officers appear more successful.

Operation Herne

The UK police force has dominated headlines recently amid
allegations that undercover officers working for the London
Metropolitan Police service used the identities of dead children
as “common practice.”

Mick Creedon, who is leading an investigation into undercover
policing dubbed Operation Herne, told British lawmakers in a
letter that none of the families of the children whose identities
were utilized were “ever contacted and informed.”

The practice has been decried as “ghoulish and
disrespectful” by politicians and potentially dangerous to
the families of the bereaved children.